I understand. My point was simply to show that despite what many players believe, there are just a few shots on a 9ft table that the player will never face on a 7ft table. And I realize I'm going against the grain here by saying that, but it doesn't make it untrue. If anything, it should help players feel less intimated when they get on a bigger table, because the majority of shots require no more skill than what is needed on a barbox of equal pocket size and depth, unless of course the player has a tendency to leave too much distance between cb and ob. That definitely makes it tougher.
I should add that I am referring to a Diamond barbox, which is slightly bigger than a valley, and it has the same size pockets as a 9ft Diamond table.
Anyway, I watch aspiring players practicing on the big table, only to go over to the smaller table and miss the same shots they were missing on the big table. On a larger table, if a player wants to work on stroke and pocketing accuracy, they should stick to practing long shots, the shots that are never seen on a barbox but come up occasionally on a 9ft. All other shots can be practiced on the small table, even though some of these players overlook that fact.
In the long run, however, I agree that playing on a 9ft will eventually make you more accurate on certain shots. But that doesn't mean a barbox can't improve your game. I know a player who refuses to play barbox tournaments. He calls barboxes "toy tables", and says real players play on big tables, not on toy tables, because "anyone" can runout on a barbox. Funny thing though, he doesn't magically start running more racks when he plays on the "toy" tables!

The reason why is exactly because of what I'm trying to explain here - the majority of shots aren't any easier simply because the table is smaller.